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Spatiotemporal mapping of the contractile and adhesive forces sculpting early C. elegans embryos

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posted on 2025-02-24, 16:13 authored by Guillaume CharrasGuillaume Charras, Kazunori Yamamoto, Nathan GoehringNathan Goehring, Joana Borrego Pinto, Hervé Turlier, sacha ichbiah, fabrice delbary, Matthieu Perez

Embryo shape is determined by individual cell mechanics, intercellular interaction strength, and geometrical constraints. Models based on surface tensions at cell interfaces can predict 3D static cellular arrangements within aggregates. However, predicting the dynamics of such arrangements is challenging due to difficulties in measuring temporal changes in tensions. Here, we characterise the spatiotemporal changes in cellular tensions shaping the early nematode embryo using AFM, live microscopy, and tension inference. Using excoriated embryos, we validate a hybrid inference pipeline that calibrates relative inferred tensions temporally using cortical myosin enrichment and absolute tensions using AFM measurements. Applied to embryos within their native shell, we infer a spatiotemporal map of absolute tensions, revealing that ABa, ABp, and EMS compaction is driven by increased tension at free surfaces, while P2’s initial exclusion is due to high tension at intercellular contacts. We uncover a direct and non-affine contribution of cadherins to cell-cell contact tension, comparable to cadherins’ indirect contribution via actomyosin regulation.

This repository contains all of the microscopy raw data and the code to produce most of the figures in the associated publication: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.07.531437

Please consult the "README" document for a full description of how to do this.

Funding

Grant-in-Aid for JSPS Fellows (16J09469)

Uehara Memorial Foundation

European Research Council consolidator grant (CoG-647186)

European Research Council starting grant (949267)

Monge scholarship from Ecole Polytechnique

Cancer Research UK (FC001086)

UK Medical Research Council (FC001086)

Wellcome Trust (FC001086)

History